Radjabov Wins Geneva FIDE Grand Prix

With draws on the top six boards in the final round, Teimour Radjabov managed to keep his lead and became the sole winner of the FIDE Grand Prix in Geneva, Switzerland. Radjabov won €20,000 ($22,936) for what was his first classical tournament victory in almost a decade.

Radjabov with a gold medal and a Dupont pen. | Photo: Valera Belobeev for WorldChess.

Radjabov drew against Nepomniachtchi, one of the two players trailing him by half a point. The other one was Grischuk, who lost his chance for shared first as Giri was just too solid. Svidler and Aronian outplayed Hou Yifan and Salem respectively.

Geneva Grand Prix | Round 9 Results

Bo.

No.

Fed

Name

Rtg

Pts.

Result

Pts.

Fed

Name

Rtg

No.

1

6

Nepomniachtchi

2742

5

½ - ½

5½

Radjabov

2724

12

2

3

Giri

2775

4½

½ - ½

5

Grischuk

2761

4

3

2

Mamedyarov

2800

4½

½ - ½

4½

Li Chao

2735

10

4

17

Riazantsev

2654

4½

½ - ½

4½

Adams

2736

9

5

8

Harikrishna

2737

4½

½ - ½

4

Jakovenko

2703

14

6

13

Inarkiev

2707

3½

½ - ½

4

Gelfand

2728

11

7

5

Svidler

2749

4

1 - 0

2½

Hou Yifan

2666

16

8

7

Eljanov

2739

4

½ - ½

2

Rapport

2694

15

9

1

Aronian

2809

3½

1 - 0

2

Salem

2638

18

"Almost certain" was perhaps too strong for describing Teimour Radjabov's chances to win this event, after the penultimate round. That was, however, based on both his good form in Geneva and his solid opening repertoire. And indeed, his draw with Ian Nepomniachtchi was both good and solid, with the tournament winner even declining a draw at some point.

"I was happy about the opening, that I got this solid position that you can play around for ages," said Radjabov. He wasn't happy that he lost the bishop pair, but after he could plant a knight on f4, he started to play for a win.

Radjabov, just after drawing his game with Nepomniachtchi. | Photo: Valera Belobeev for WorldChess.

Radjabov, who is back in the world's top 20 in the live ratings, said about his tournament in general: "Besides my games against Grischuk and today, in general I was able to pull myself together, so I think that's why things went pretty much my way."

FIDE Press Officer Goran Urosevic spoke with the players after the game.

This meant that Alexander Grischuk could still catch Radjabov, but for this he needed to beat another very solid player as Black: Anish Giri. The Dutchman felt he was outplaying his opponent (Black's bishop on h7 was completely out of the game), but as soon as 29...d4 came he needed to be careful. Luckily for him, the endgame was more or less a draw by force.

"I had to try to win today because with a draw I had very little chances to qualify," said Grischuk. "I was quite happy with what was going on. Maybe my position was worse but at least White's position was extended, and it might become over-extended at some point."

Grischuk, whose Grand Prix is over now, said that, as an exception, he felt he was playing well in this series. "I'm upset that I'm probably not going to qualify."

WGM Anna Burtasova spoke with the players after the game. Don't miss the last part of the interview, where Grischuk openly wonders how bad it is if he would help the opponents of his rivals of the GP during the last leg. 😂

Before his game with Hou Yifan, Peter Svidler was helped by his second Maxim Matlakov. The two spoke on Skype, and Matlakov had noticed that the Chinese lady recently joined the trend of playing the Semi-Tarrasch. "Look at my game from Minsk against Shimanov," was his advice, and Svidler did.

"I obviously couldn't remember anything but the fact that I kind of knew the basic ideas and could play fast in the opening when she already had to start thinking after 11.d5 was obviously a huge advantage for me."

Pushing Delroy the d-pawn was the central theme, similar to many Grünfeld positions so Svidler knew what he was doing. "I had so many bad experiences on the other side of these things."

Levon Aronian used an old line of Mark Taimanov to combat Saleh Salem's King's Indian: the modest 9.Bd2 in the Mar del Plata variation. "I got a good position out of the opening," Aronian said. "I thought the old Taimanov line is still good."

His approach for the rest of the game was modest as well. "I probably have much better moves but decided to make sure there's nothing to calculate in the game because I've been blundering in so many games. I wanted to keep it simple and then my opponent blundered, so the plan worked out."

Asked why he's performing much worse in these GP tournaments than in other major events, Aronian replied: "I think I'm not taking it too seriously. I should work on it."

WGM Anna Burtasova spoke with Levon Aronian after the game.

Geneva Grand Prix | Final Standings

#

Fed

Name

Rtg

Perf

Pts

SB

1

Radjabov, Teimour

2724

2872

6.0/9

2-3

Grischuk, Alexander

2761

2825

5.5/9

24.25

2-3

Nepomniachtchi, Ian

2742

2812

5.5/9

22.50

4-10

Harikrishna, Pentala

2737

2779

5.0/9

25.25

4-10

Mamedyarov, Shakhriyar

2800

2775

5.0/9

24.50

4-10

Li Chao

2735

2783

5.0/9

24.00

4-10

Svidler, Peter

2749

2765

5.0/9

20.25

4-10

Riazantsev, Alexander

2654

2751

5.0/9

19.75

4-10

Adams, Michael

2736

2749

5.0/9

19.25

4-10

Giri, Anish

2775

2752

5.0/9

19.00

11-14

Gelfand, Boris

2728

2735

4.5/9

20.50

11-14

Aronian, Levon

2809

2730

4.5/9

19.75

11-14

Jakovenko, Dmitry

2703

2741

4.5/9

19.25

11-14

Eljanov, Pavel

2739

2721

4.5/9

16.00

15

Inarkiev, Ernesto

2707

2671

4.0/9

16-17

Rapport, Richard

2694

2540

2.5/9

9.50

16-17

Hou Yifan

2666

2549

2.5/9

8.75

18

Salem, Saleh

2638

2508

2.0/9

With his victory in Gevena, Radjabov won his first big tournament in almost a decade. The last time he came first in a classical tournament was in December 2008, when he scored 8/13 and tied for first place with Dmitry Jakovenko and Alexander Grischuk at the Elista Grand Prix. Before that, he shared first in Wijk aan Zee in 2007 together with Veselin Topalov and Levon Aronian, scoring 8.5/13.

Radjabov's last sole victory in classical chess is probably Dos Hermanas 2005 (!) where he scored 5.5/9, finishing ahead of Alexey Dreev, Zurab Azmaiparashvili, Alexander Rustemov and Ruben Felgaer. Interestingly, one other Geneva participant played in that tournament: Pentala Harikrishna, who scored 4.5/9.

In the last decade the Azerbaijani had quite a few second places in super tournaments and other success, and he got his rating all the way up to 2793 in November 2012. However, it seems that with his last place in the 2013 Candidates's Tournament, he lost some of his motivation.

Radjabov also changed his opening repertoire. Whereas he used to play e.g. the Sicilian Dragon, his openings are more focused on safety now. Hopefully his victory in Geneva will bring back some of the old fire—the fire with which he managed to beat Garry Kasparov at the age of 15, in Linares in 2003.

Victory of @rajachess is well deserved. He made a decisive 38.Rxg7 in our game with 1 second left on his clock. It gives courage!

The Geneva Grand Prix took place July 6-15 in the Hotel Le Richemond in Geneva. The prize fund was €130,000 / $148,520. The time control was 100 minutes for the first 40 moves, 50 minutes for the next 20 moves and then 15 minutes for the rest of the game plus an additional 30 seconds per move starting from move 1.

Below you'll find the current overall Grand Prix standings. All players play three of the four tournaments; the bold names are the six players who have finished their Grand Prix as they played all legs so far.

FIDE Grand Prix 2017 | Standings After Three Legs*

Rk.

Fed

Name

Sharjah

Moscow

Geneva

Palma

Total

1

Mamedyarov, Shakhriyar

140

140

60

x

340

2

Grischuk, Alexander

140

71,4

125

x

336,4

3

Radjabov, Teimour

x

71,4

170

?

241,4

4

Ding Liren

70

170

x

?

240

5

Vachier-Lagrave, Maxime

140

71,4

x

?

211,4

6

Nepomniachtchi, Ian

70

3

125

x

198

7

Nakamura, Hikaru

70

71,4

x

?

141,4

8

Adams, Michael

70

3

60

x

133

9

Giri, Anish

x

71,4

60

?

131,4

10

Svidler, Peter

x

71,4

60

?

131,4

11

Li Chao

25

x

60

?

85

12

Jakovenko, Dmitry

70

x

11

?

81

13

Hou Yifan

7

71,4

2,5

x

80,9

14

Harikrishna, Pentala

x

20

60

?

80

15

Riazantsev, Alexander

1

x

60

?

61

16

Eljanov, Pavel

25

x

11

?

36

17

Vallejo, Pons Francisco

25

7

x

?

32

18

Gelfand,Boris

x

20

11

?

31

19

Rapport, Richard

25

x

2,5

?

27,5

20

Tomashevsky, Evgeny

3

20

x

?

23

21

Aronian, Levon

7

x

11

?

18

22

Hammer, Jon Ludvig

3

7

x

?

10

23

Salem, Saleh

3

3

1

x

7

24

Inarkiev, Ernesto

x

1

4

?

5

*These standings were calculated by Chess.com and are yet to be confirmed by FIDE.

The fourth and last leg is scheduled to take place 16-25 November in Palma de Mallorca. The top two finishers of the overall Grand Prix will qualify for the 2018 Candidates' Tournament.

Currently Mamedyarov is leading, and Grischuk is second. Sole victory in Palma will earn 170 points, which means that, besides the current two leaders, only Radjabov, Ding Liren and MVL still have a chance to qualify via the GP.

However, almost everyone will be playing the World Cup in September in Tbilisi, where two more spots are for grabs. For the two players who will be qualifying by rating, you can check this Google Doc by Martin Bennedik throughout 2017. If nothing will work, there's always the organizer's wild card for one more player.